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{{Short description|Web browser}}
{{
{{Infobox
| logo =
| screenshot = MainPage-HotJava3-Optim.png
| caption = HotJava 3.0 under Windows XP
| developer = [[Sun Microsystems]]<ref name="nwfusion" />
| released = {{Start date and age|1997|03|24}}<ref name="nwfusion">{{cite web|last=Rakitin |first=Jason |title=Review: Alternative Web browsers |url=http://www.nwfusion.com/news/1997/1027browser2.html |publisher=
| latest release version = Late {{Start date and age|2004}} <small>''v3.0''</small>
| latest release date =
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| genre = [[Web browser]]
| license =
| website =
}}
'''HotJava''' (later called '''HotJava Browser''' to distinguish it from [[HotJava Views]]) was a modular, extensible [[web browser]] from [[Sun Microsystems]] implemented in [[Java (programming language)|Java]]. It was the first browser to support [[Java applet]]s, and was Sun's demonstration platform for the then-new technology.<ref>{{cite web|last=Watson|first=Dave|title=A Quick Look at HotJava|url=http://www.scoug.com/os24u/2001/hotjava.html|publisher=
==Origins==
In 1994, a team of Oak/Java developers started writing WebRunner, which was a clone of the
WebRunner's first public demonstration was given by [[John Gage]] and [[James Gosling]] at the [[Technology Entertainment Design]] Conference in [[Monterey, California]] in 1995. Renamed HotJava, it was officially announced in May the same year at the SunWorld conference.
The parser code was reused by the standard Java libraries.<ref>
==Usage==
HotJava had somewhat limited functionality compared to other browsers of its time.
More critically, HotJava suffered from the inherent performance limitations of [[Java
==See also==
{{Portal|Computer programming}}
*[[Comparison of web browsers]]▼
* [[
* [[Mozilla Grendel]]
==References==
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==External links==
*{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/19990202161640/http://java.sun.com/products/hotjava/ |date=February 2, 1999 |title=HotJava Browser }}
*{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/19961225173659/http://sunsite.unc.edu:80/pub/sun-info/hotjava/ |date=December 25, 1996 |title=HotJava 1.0 alpha2; first public release }}
*[
*{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/19961104090931/http://www.euroyellowpages.com/exhibitn/javhwhat.html |date=November 4, 1996 |title=What is HotJava? }}
*[http://www.useit.com/alertbox/9506.html History has a Lesson for HotJava]
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{{Timeline of web browsers|1990s}}
{{Web browsers|desktop}}
{{Java (Sun)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hotjava}}
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[[Category:Java platform software]]
[[Category:Sun Microsystems software]]
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